In 2011, Enfield became the coach of an obscure, nascent college called ... Florida Gulf Coast University. And here he is, two years later, helping the Eagles capture the nation by becoming the first No. 15 seed to advance to the Sweet 16 in NCAA tournament history.

"I love these stories," Beilein said this week. "I think it makes this tournament so special.

"He's not just both a great shooter, but teaches. It's a great story -- don't see it stopping.
There's a lot of room for this in college basketball if you do things the right way and get kids to stick around you can grow a program more than people think you can."

Florida Gulf Coast has become one of the biggest surprises in the history of the tournament. The Fort Meyers school didn't even admit its first students until 1997. Its oldest alum is 37 years old.

The Eagles didn't even win its own league, the Atlantic Sun. They lost to Maine. It lost to Lipscomb ... twice.

But they have been magical in the tournament, ousting No. 2 seed Georgetown and No. 7 seed San Diego State -- and doing it by an average of 10 points. They've earned the moniker "Dunk City" for their tenacity at the rim.

They've become the biggest national story of the tournament.

And now, they're just a game from facing Michigan.

The Wolverines face top-seeded Kansas on Friday (7:37 p.m., TBS), while Florida Gulf Coast follows with a game against in-state rival Florida. Of course, rival would suggest the Gators even knew FGCU existed before the tournament.